The Internet Freaks Out When Taco Bell Reveals What’s Actually in Their ‘88% Beef’ Beef. Protip: Don’t Panic

When Taco Bell, purveyors of Doritos Locos Tacos and bubbleguts, announced that their beef was 88 percent beef, the internet had an expected field day. Now, it’s come to our attention that the chain’s website offers an amusing explanation of many of the unfamiliar ingredients found in the other 12 percent. As Eater’s Ryan Sutton calls it, the breakdown takes a modernist approach to cuisine and offers frank answers to curious fast food patrons.

Here are a few explainers from the Taco Bell site.

On maltodextrin:

maltodextrin

On Cellulose

cellulose

Despite the chain’s colloquial explanation of the ingredients that go into  its mystery beef-ish slushies, food writers and netizens alike are harping on the fact that these “weird names” and “confusing” descriptions are in fact chemicals.

Wait. So you’re surprised that the beef that’s probably been frozen since you graduated high school and is now nuked to room-temperature contains chemicals? If only something called the internet had something called Google where you could learn about the ingredients that go into your meal.

Bottomline: Stop. whining. or. stop. eating. fast. food. It’s as simple as that. Really.

More content

CultureInnovation
Lebanon Breaks Japan’s World Record For Biggest Bucket Of Chicken Nuggets
There are Guinness World Records for all sorts of hilariously random things. For example, a Serbian man named Dalibor Jablanovic holds the world record for…
,
InnovationProducts
Meet the World’s First ‘Smart Vodka’
Vodka just got a tech upgrade. Amoon Spirits has launched what it calls the world’s first smart vodka, an ultra-premium spirit paired with an interactive…
,
CultureProducts
Bud Light And The Buffalo Bills Make Beer From Snow
Bud Light has announced a limited-edition Blizzard Brew, made with snow from Highmark Stadium to celebrate Buffalo Bills fans and one of the NFL’s signature…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox